Affichage des articles dont le libellé est Oana Avasilichioaei. Afficher tous les articles
Affichage des articles dont le libellé est Oana Avasilichioaei. Afficher tous les articles

jeudi 13 septembre 2012

Lecture le 18 sept avec Martin Richet, Mina Pam Dick et Oana Avasilichioaei



Ivy Writers Paris vous invite à une lecture bilingue le 18 septembre à 19h30 avec les poètes  
Oana Avasilichioaei (canadienne)  
Mina Pam Dick (américaine) 
et  
Martin Richet  
(français)!!!

à 19h30
mardi le 18 septembre 
AU sous-sol du bar de nuit  
LE NEXT
17 rue Tiquetonne
75002 Paris
Métro Etienne Marcel/ RER Les Halles



Start off the 2012-2013 season with Ivy Writers Paris on the 18th of September with visiting Canadian and American authors Oana Avasilichioaei and Mina Pam Dick reading with French poet and translator Martin Richet! Mina Pam and Oana will also perform together “Transpose – an individual and co-reading by Mina Pam Dick and Oana Avasilichioaei”


BIOS :
Martin Richet est l'auteur de L'Autobiographie de Gertrude Stein (Eric Pesty Editeur, 2011) et Bureau vertical / Onze pour Table, (Cahiers de la Seine, 2006). Traducteur de métier, il a récemment traduit Pied bot de Charles Bernstein (Joca Seria, 2012), Le cycle des tilleuls d'Etel Adnan (Al Manar, 2012), L'ouverture du champ de Robert Duncan (José Corti, fin 2012) et Les Sonnets de Ted Berrigan (Joca Seria, fin 2012). Il prépare actuellement une anthologie des poèmes de Larry Eigner.  



Oana Avasilichioaei est l’auteure de: We, Beasts, (Wolsak & Wynn, 2012), The Islands (translations of Louise Cotnoir) (Wolsak & Wynn, 2011), Expeditions of a Chimaera (co-written with Erin Moure), feria: a poempark (Wolsak & Wynn, 2008), Occupational Sickness (translations of Romanian poet Nichita Stanescu) (BuschekBooks, 2006) et Abandon (Wolsak and Wynn, 2005) Some of the strands in Oana Avasilichioaei’s work traverse geography and public space (feria: a poempark, 2008), textual architecture, orality and multilingualism (We, Beasts, 2012), translation and collaborative performance (Expeditions of a Chimæra, co-written with Erín Moure, 2009). Living in Montreal, Canada, she has performed her work in Canada, USA, Mexico and Europe, and has translated poetry from the Romanian of Nichita Stănescu (Occupational Sickness, 2006) and from the Quebecois French of Louise Cotnoir (The Islands, 2011). Recent projects include an epistolary poetic project, ff or letters to a fellow fluency, co-written with felix p.d., and transforming text into performative sound work: http://writing.upenn.edu/pennsound/x/Avasilichioaei.php. Also read her comments, extracts, reviews at: http://jacket2.org/commentary/oana-avasilichioaei  For a full bio see: http://poets.ca/members_data/Oana%20Avasilichioaei

Mina Pam Dick (aka Traver Pam Dick, Gregoire Pam Dick et al.) is a writer, translator, artist and philosopher living in New York City. Her prose poetry has appeared in BOMB, The Brooklyn Rail, Aufgabe, Everyday Genius, The Recluse and Fence Magazine, and is forthcoming in Mrs. Maybe; her philosophical work has appeared in a collection published by the International Wittgenstein Symposium. Her translations, mistranslations and co-translations can be found in Telephone Journal and Dandelion. Dick’s first book, Delinquent, was published by Futurepoem Books in 2009. Currently, Dick is working on transgenre books which engage with Hölderlin, Trakl, Lenz, Büchner and Robert Walser. They do philosophy as lit, and explore fluid identity, tonal alternation’s music, the poetics of sex with sibling books. See: http://eoagh.com/?p=843 and http://www.everyday-genius.com/2010/07/hildebrand-pam-dick.html

ABOUT TRANSPOSE:
Transpose – exchange places; shift contexts; play music in a different key; change forms; pose difficulties; raise questions; assume positions of the mindbody; mistake identities.

Once upon a time in the land of translit (prose poetry as philosophy, poetry as sound performance, textual transience of the wandering I) there lived Avasilichioaei and Dick. Dick transversed mounts of subjective texts (truth as first-personal, world an idiocosm) dug deep into linguistic contours, risking marginals. Germaning up the Trakls, Kafkas, Hölderlins, Wittgensteins, Kierkegaards (incestuous poetics as making out or off with kindred texts), Dick became subject to Mina Pam Dick, Traver Pam Dick, Hildebrand Pam Dick and so on (how the act of writing fictionalizes the author, who moves in and out of protagonist/narrator). Avasilichioaei tried various positions (mapping out the page’s architecture, in the porous boundary between page and body, private and public), positing a translation or two, an invented writer or two (writing with, alongside, in response to, against the signature of anothers), landscaping sound and sounding into the pagescape (transcription in the foliage of veins, the throat’s technology; body sounding out its sediments, its vocal multiple). One day, Avasilichioaei and Dick, qua Odile A. and Felix P. D., began writing across the letters of Ingeborg Bachman (language doing language, trans-sex through text). 


Lecture suivante/ NEXT READING: 
le 9 Oct 2012 avec Rémi Bouthonnier et Lisa Samuels

lundi 6 août 2012

Prochaines lectures!!! Forthcoming Readings!!! le 18 sept 2012 et le 9 oct 2012!

Summer is sizzling and we are all off who knows where in the world reading, reading, reading on our own. But fear not! IVY will be back this fall with an exciting season start--

on the 18th of September with visiting Canadian and American authors Oana Avasilichioaei and Mina Pam Dick! I will let you know soon who is reading with them (hopefully Martin Richet!). For more information on this event in 2 anglo voices, see below...

And then
on October 9th 2012 we will hear Canadian poet Lisa Samuels with French author and translator Rémi Bouthonnier!!!


FOR THE 18th of September:

Transpose – an individual and co-reading by Mina Pam Dick and Oana Avasilichioaei which will be part of IVY's reading to inaugurate the 2012-2013 season this September 18th 2012!!!

Transpose – exchange places; shift contexts; play music in a different key; change forms; pose difficulties; raise questions; assume positions of the mindbody; mistake identities.

Once upon a time in the land of translit (prose poetry as philosophy, poetry as sound performance, textual transience of the wandering I) there lived Avasilichioaei and Dick. Dick transversed mounts of subjective texts (truth as first-personal, world an idiocosm) dug deep into linguistic contours, risking marginals. Germaning up the Trakls, Kafkas, Hölderlins, Wittgensteins, Kierkegaards (incestuous poetics as making out or off with kindred texts), Dick became subject to Mina Pam Dick, Traver Pam Dick, Hildebrand Pam Dick and so on (how the act of writing fictionalizes the author, who moves in and out of protagonist/narrator). Avasilichioaei tried various positions (mapping out the page’s architecture, in the porous boundary between page and body, private and public), positing a translation or two, an invented writer or two (writing with, alongside, in response to, against the signature of anothers), landscaping sound and sounding into the pagescape (transcription in the foliage of veins, the throat’s technology; body sounding out its sediments, its vocal multiple). One day, Avasilichioaei and Dick, qua Odile A. and Felix P. D., began writing across the letters of Ingeborg Bachman (language doing language, trans-sex through text).


Some of the strands in Oana Avasilichioaei’s work traverse geography and public space (feria: a poempark, 2008), textual architecture, orality and multilingualism (We, Beasts, 2012), translation and collaborative performance (Expeditions of a Chimæra, co-written with Erín Moure, 2009). Living in Montreal, Canada, she has performed her work in Canada, USA, Mexico and Europe, and has translated poetry from the Romanian of Nichita Stănescu (Occupational Sickness, 2006) and from the Quebecois French of Louise Cotnoir (The Islands, 2011). Recent projects include an epistolary poetic project, ff or letters to a fellow fluency, co-written with felix p.d., and transforming text into performative sound work: http://writing.upenn.edu/pennsound/x/Avasilichioaei.php.


Mina Pam Dick (aka Traver Pam Dick, Gregoire Pam Dick et al.) is a writer, translator, artist and philosopher living in New York City. Her prose poetry has appeared in BOMB, The Brooklyn Rail, Aufgabe, Everyday Genius, The Recluse and Fence Magazine, and is forthcoming in Mrs. Maybe; her philosophical work has appeared in a collection published by the International Wittgenstein Symposium. Her translations, mistranslations and co-translations can be found in Telephone Journal and Dandelion. Dick’s first book, Delinquent, was published by Futurepoem Books in 2009. Currently, Dick is working on transgenre books which engage with Hölderlin, Trakl, Lenz, Büchner and Robert Walser. They do philosophy as lit, and explore fluid identity, tonal alternation’s music, the poetics of sex with sibling books. See: http://eoagh.com/?p=843 and http://www.everyday-genius.com/2010/07/hildebrand-pam-dick.html

jeudi 6 mai 2010

TRANSMISSIBILITE: Lecture-performance le 12 mai 2010

IVY WRITERS PARIS invites you to celebrate translation!!!:
Venez fêter la traduction avec IVY Writers!!!
with a reading by authors, editors, translators and performers in Paris for the FMSH / EHESS conference "Translation / transmissibility and transcultural communication in the social sciences"!

Post-conference IVY reading:
12th of May 2010
7pm
At: Le Next
17 rue Tiquetonne
75002 Paris (M° Etienne Marcel)

Multilingual performances and bilingual readings will punctuate this evening which is to celebrate language, sound, poetry, connections. Please join authors Pierre Joris (American, who has written more than 40 books), Christophe Ippolito(American translator of books by Lebanese author Nadia Tuéni), Mark Goldstein (Canadian publisher, author and translator of Celan and Rilke), Susanna Sulic (Argentinian author and performing artist), Christophe Marchand-Kiss (French poet-performer-translator), as well as three rising stars in poetry and translation from Canada: Angela Carr, Bronwyn Haslam and Oana Avasilichioaei.


Fêter la traduction avec Ivy Writers Paris!
Auteurs, intervenants du colloque « La traduction /la transmissibilité et la communication transculturelle dans les sciences sociales » (FMSH / EHESS les 10-11 mai 2010 :
http://traductiontransmissibilite.blogspot.com/ ), traducteurs, éditeurs et performeurs liront des textes en langue anglaise, espagnole, arabe, française, allemande...avec :
Angela Carr (canadienne),
Pierre Joris (américain/Luxembourgeois),
Susanna Sulic (argentine),
Mark Goldstein (canadien),
Christophe Marchand-Kiss (français)
Bronwyn Haslam (canadienne),
Oana Avasilichioaei (canadienne),
Christophe Ippolito (américain, qui lira des textes du poète libanais Nadia Tuéni )


mercredi le 12 mai 2010
à partir de 19h
au bar LE NEXT,
17 rue Tiquetonne,75002 Paris,
M° Etienne Marcel / RER Les Halles.
Entree libre!

Readings in English, French, Spanish, German, Romanian, Arabic & more!
We hope you and your friends will all join us!!!

Bios:
Pierre Joris is a poet, translator, essayist & anthologist who left Luxembourg at 19 and has since lived in France, England, Algeria & the United States. He has published over forty books, most recently Canto Diurno #4: The Tang Extending from the Blade, an 2010 Ahadada Books (ebook), Justifying the Margins: Essays 1990-2006 and Aljibar I & II (poems). Other recent publications include the CD Routes, not Roots and Meditations on the Stations of Mansour Al-Hallaj 1-21. Recent translations include Paul Celan: Selections, and Lightduress by Paul Celan, which received the 2005 PEN Poetry Translation Award. With Jerome Rothenberg he edited the award-winning anthologies Poems for the Millennium (volumes I & II). He teaches at the University of Albany, SUNY. Check out his website (http://pierrejoris.com/home.html) & his Nomadics blog (http://pierrejoris.com/blog/).

Oana Avasilichioaei : Poète et traductrice (du français et du roumain vers l’anglais), Oana Avasilichioaei vit et travaille à Montréal. Elle a publié, notamment, les recueils de poésie Abandon (2005) et feria : a poempark (2008), une traduction de la poésie de Nichita Stănescu intitulé Occupational Sickness (2006), et un livre écrit en collaboration avec la poète canadienne Erín Moure intitulé Expeditions of a Chimæra (2009). Sa traduction du recueil de poésie Les Îles, de l’écrivaine québécoise Louise Cotnoir, sera publiée en 2011. Elle participe aux diverses activités littéraires et professionnelles au Canada, aux États-Unis, au Mexique et en Europe. (Click beige titles-links here to see/hear: 1) A Live reading from feria: a poempark and Expeditions of a Chimæra 2) Publisher author pages: Oana 3) Sample from current book in progress, We, Beasts 4) Sample video from Feria: a poempark 5) Two samples from Expeditions of a Chimæra on Jacket Magazine and on NYpoesi.)

Le livre de poèmes le plus récent de l’auteur Mark Goldstein de Toronto, After Rilke: To Forget You Sang, a été publié par BookThug au printemps 2008. After Rilke est une série de traductions homophoniques basée sur les Voix, un travail écrit par Rilke en 1906. Plus récemment, sa propre petite presse, Beautiful Outlaw, a publié Handwerk, un ensemble de six chapbooks par les poètes Phil Hall, Erin Moure, Oana Avasilichioaei, Angela Carr, Jay MillAr et Goldstein. Sa collection de poemes suivante, Tracelanguage: A Shared Breath, les trans-traductions le travail séminal de 1967 du poète Paul Celan, Atemwende, vient d'être publiée par BookThug (printemps 2010).

Poète et traductrice Canadienne Angela Carr est l’auteur des receuils The Rose Concordance (BookThug, 2009) et Ropewalk (Snare, 2006). Ses poèmes ont paru dans des revues littéraires au Canada, notamment Open Letter, Jacket, Action Yes et textsound. Elle a presenté sur la traduction poétique à CUNY et l’Université de Calgary (Translating Translating Montréal). Elle enseigne au Toronto New School of Writing, mais elle vit à Montréal.

Bronwyn Haslam est un poète originaire de Calgary, au Canada. Elle a étudié à l'université de Calgary, où elle a obtenu un B.A. (hons) en littérature anglaise et un B.Sc. en biologie cellulaire et moléculaire. Ses poèmes ont été publiés dans des revues canadiennes telles que Matrix, The Capilano Review et The Last Supper. Elle habite actuellement à Montréal, où elle travaille comme écrivaine médicale.

Christophe Ippolito, professeur adjoint au Georgia Institute of Technology (Atlanta), travaille sur la modernité et l’antimodernité. Son dernier livre édité est Lebanon: Poems of Love and War / Liban: Poèmes d’amour et de guerre, de Nadia Tuéni (Syracuse: Syracuse University Press ; Beyrouth : Dar An-Nahar, 2006) ; son dernier article publié est « La conclusion d’Indiana», Revue d’Histoire Littéraire de la France (2009-3) : 555-572) ; pour plus d’informations, consulter http://christopheippolito.com/ He will be reading from translations of Tuéni’s writings.

Susana Sulic
a écrit Poésie virale, Clones et Contamina©tion (Indigo, 2005), Le Poids de l’art (Indigo, Paris 2000), Méta-forêt, peintures & sculptures de Claude Feuillet, avec illustrations de CF (Indigo, 2005), El Peso del Arte en America latina/Le poids de l'Art en Amérique latine (Indigo) et Sciences et technologies dans l’art contemporain en Argentine (Harmattan, 2004). En 2009, le livre d'art Ondulations est paru chez les éditions Aenis : un livre trilingue d’art et de poésie avec des peintures de Georgio Fidone (plasticien italien), et poèmes de Jennifer K Dick (américaine, poème en anglais), de Jacques de Longeville (français, poème en français) et de Susana Sulic (argentine, poème en espagnole).
Christophe Marchand-Kiss a dirigé la collection «L’Œil du poète » aux Éditions Textuel. Auteur de performances, traducteur de l’anglais (Herman Melville, Edgar Poe, John Cage, Gertrude Stein, Peter Greenaway, Yoko Ono, Erns Jandl (de l'allemand) et de jeunes poètes américains), il est l’auteur de plusieurs livres—parmi les plus récents : Gainsbourg, le génie sinon rien (Textuel 2006) aléas, (Le bleu du ciel, Bordeaux, 2007) Moins quelque chose, première partie, (Idp éditeur, 2007) alter ago suivi de biography, (éditions Textuel, Paris, 2005) Text and Line in Figurated Poems and Calligrams, in Spatula, (edited by Gordon Shrigley, Marmalade, London, 2004). Lire un extrait de Pièces dispersées d'un puzzle nommé Japon sur: http://www.inventaire-invention.com/jet-stream/textes/kiss.html